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Created by Dennis

I.M. Profit Seekers

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Profit from your knowledge... Increase your knowledge through group sharing.

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13 contributions to I.M. Profit Seekers
New here
Hey Everyone
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New comment 9d ago
0 likes • 9d
Welcome.
Super Affiliate Tip
Send a group email to your list for an affiliate offer. If it converts well, add it to your autoresponder series for automated sales! Pro Tip: Offer a bonus to increase sales (It should compliment the main offer) have the buyers fill out an opt-in form to get access and segment buyers to a new list.
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New comment 26d ago
1 like • 26d
Excellent and obvious, but a good reminder because so many marketers either use just one or neither of those methods.
My sales
Hello everyone, I hope you're all doing well! I had a very successful month last month, earning over $13,000, and I'm now looking for ways to expand and grow my business even further this month. Any advice, suggestions, or tips you can offer would be greatly appreciated and helpful in scaling up my business.
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New comment 26d ago
0 likes • 26d
$13K is good, congratulations. What niche are you in?
Would you like to earn an extra $1000/month or more? We can help...
If so,, let me share this with you: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1VWk8WqMbPgzsmnstGqa8eLq0VTB8enNML6VanCAgKPM/edit?usp=sharing
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New comment Jun 4
0 likes • Jun 4
@Wai kei Hooi Really? Still not loading? Do you have a Google Docs account?
Silicon Sultans?
Came across this earlier; it has some good lessons for all of us. =-=-= Robber barons and silicon sultans =-=-= "IN THE 50 years between the end of the American civil war in 1865 and the outbreak of the first world war in 1914, a group of entrepreneurs spearheaded America’s transformation from an agricultural into an industrial society, built gigantic business empires and amassed huge fortunes. In 1848 John J. Astor, a merchant trader, was America’s richest man with $20m (now $545m). By the time the United States entered the first world war, John D. Rockefeller had become its first billionaire. In the 50 years since Data General introduced the first mini-computers in the late 1960s, a group of entrepreneurs have spearheaded the transformation of an industrial age into an information society, built gigantic business empires and acquired huge fortunes. When he died in 1992, Sam Walton, the founder of Walmart, was probably America’s richest man with $8 billion. Today Bill Gates occupies that position with $82.3 billion. The first group is now known as the robber barons. The second lot—call them the silicon sultans—could face a similar fate. Like their predecessors, they were once revered as inventive mould-breakers, delivering gadgets to the masses. But just like Rockefeller and the other “malefactors of great wealth”, these new capitalists are losing their sheen. They have been diversifying into businesses that have little to do with computers, while egotistically proclaiming that they alone can solve mankind’s problems, from ageing to space travel. More pointedly, they stand accused of being greedy businessfolk who suborn politicians, employ sweatshop labour, stiff other shareholders and, especially, monopolise markets. Rockefeller once controlled 80% of the world’s supply of oil: today Google has 90% of the search market in Europe and 67% in the United States. Together, the two groups throw light on some of the most enduring themes of American history—both the country’s extraordinary ability to generate vast wealth and its enduring ambivalence about concentrations of power. Henry Ford, the youngest of the robber barons, once said that history is more or less bunk. He was wrong. The silicon sultans have the advantage of being able to learn from their predecessors’ mistakes. It is not entirely clear that they are doing so.
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New comment May 21
0 likes • May 21
Very fascinating indeed.
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Dennis Becker
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@dennis-becker-7400
Author of 5 Bucks a Day and 50+ more eBooks. I absolutely adore licensing products that can help my followers, almost regardless of price.

Active 2d ago
Joined Apr 30, 2024
Bergenfield, NJ, USA
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